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Decorating Nature
As the weather cools, cut flowers in vases replace dried branches and fruit. People are already carefully picking chestnuts, gardeners are pruning trees, and composting dead cucumbers, squash, and potato seedlings. Let\’s welcome this atmosphere and use it for creative projects.
– Chapters
Interesting twigs can provide inspiration for a variety of interior accessories. For example, long branches can be painted with acrylic paint, strung together with string art, or tied with dream catchers or feathers. If you don\’t have a toilet paper holder, fill a large bowl or basket with pebbles, stick a branch in it, and string a few rolls of toilet paper on top. If large enough, a whole roll of toilet paper can be placed on top.
Use the slices to make brooches, earrings, and pendants. Simply polish them with sandpaper and varnish them. At the Creative Shop, you can buy screw eyes.
– Arrows
Dried rose hips are suitable not only for tea, but also for a variety of decorations. Now is the time to pick them. Stick fresh rosehips with a hook, let them dry, and you have a cheap and natural Christmas decoration. They can also be made into chains with a needle and string.
– Cranberries
Attach fresh berries to string or rubber bands like darts and you have natural beads. They are beautiful even when dry. They can also be used as Christmas tree chains.
– Pecky
If you have extra plum, peach, or apricot seeds, you can use them for pendants. Wash well, dry, and sand them. Drill a hole through which to thread a string or insert a screw eye, and you are done.
– Dried fruit [64]
Extra apples can be cut and dried in the sun or in the oven. These can be eaten throughout the winter or hung on Christmas trees or conifer branches. Orange and warming spices, such as whole cinnamon, star anise, and cloves, also go well together. Your imagination has no limits, so feel free to experiment.
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